70 research outputs found
How to Have a 'Good Home' The Practical Aesthetic and Normativity in Norway
This article presents an exploration of home decoration and domestic aesthetics in the
Norwegian town of Skien. The analysis of everyday domestic aesthetics is derived from
original ethnographic research in which a normative social reference point such as practicality
is investigated in the organization of material culture and decorative order. I analyse
domestic aesthetics in terms of Campbell's discussion of need or desire-based rhetoric as
forming the basis of consumer choices. I discuss this position through an analysis of 'the
practical' (praktiskj as it pertains to ideas of the 'good home' in Norway. I suggest that
practicality can be described as an idiom through which an aaeptable image of individual
priorities is projected. The articulation of socially legitimate objectives also allows a certain
disjuncture between words and actions and underpins one expression of the normative home
DOMESTIC BOUNDARIES Privacy, Visibility and the Norwegian Window
The article presents an exploration of domestic borders in the Norwegian
town of Skien. Differences between homes may be minimal, however the
differentiation between homes, can occasionally, be marked (Wallman,
1978: 203). This observation has relevance for Norwegian and Somali house-
holds whereby perceptions of domestic boundaries, visibility and definitions
of privacy are analysed. The domestic window is shown to provide one
material medium for the negotiation of ethnic identity and social classifi-
cation. I argue notions of the private are dynamic and contextual and
frequently have less to do with ‘being seen’ than with a perception of the
social gaze. Consequently, looking at ethnic minorities, Norwegian locals
and the private home in Skien does not just imply investigating the link
between visibility and privacy but questioning the ideas on which this link
is based, and rethinking notions of privacy itself
The Norwegian country cabin and functionalism: a tale of two modernities
The mountain or shore-side cabin (hytte) represents a common leisure form for a significant proportion of
the Norwegian population. Its roots can be traced to the decline of farming society, growing urbanisation
and an emphasis on the outdoor life as part of 20th-century state modernising projects. Throughout this
modern history, and through periods of accelerated social change, the cabin has represented an ‘other’ form of
domesticity. This paper makes the argument that far from representing an escape from post-industrial consumer
society, the hytte prompts evaluation, comparison or negation of normative domesticity for its occupants. Many
priorities such as getting back-to-nature and living the simple life are achieved best, paradoxically, through
their material manifestation. Routine and rupture, and discourse surrounding farming culture artefacts are
central in evoking contrast
Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland
There are not many books about how people get younger. It doesn’t happen very often. But Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland documents a radical change in the experience of ageing. Based on two ethnographies, one within Dublin and the other from the Dublin region, the book shows that people, rather than seeing themselves as old, focus on crafting a new life in retirement. Our research participants apply new ideals of sustainability both to themselves and to their environment. They go for long walks, play bridge, do yoga, and keep as healthy as possible. As part of Ireland’s mainstream middle class, they may have more time than the young to embrace green ideals and more money to move to energy-efficient homes, throw out household detritus and protect their environment. The smartphone has become integral to this new trajectory. For some it is an intimidating burden linked to being on the wrong side of a new digital divide. But for most, however, it has brought back the extended family and old friends, and helped resolve intergenerational conflicts though facilitating new forms of grandparenting. It has also become central to health issues, whether by Googling information or looking after frail parents. The smartphone enables this sense of getting younger as people download the music of their youth and develop new interests. This is a book about acknowledging late middle age in contemporary Ireland. How do older people in Ireland experience life today? Praise for Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland 'An innovative and thorough description and analysis of how one small piece of technology has changed the way Irish people live their lives.' Tom Inglis, Professor Emeritus of Sociology in University College Dublin ; 'An innovative and thorough description and analysis of how one small piece of technology has changed the way Irish people live their lives.' Tom Inglis, Professor Emeritus of Sociology in University College Dubli
Grandparenting as the resolution of kinship as experience
This article argues that a population of relatively affluent retired people in a small Irish town have employed the possibilities of grandparenting to resolve many of the tensions of contemporary kinship. This includes the tension between the obligations of prescriptive relationships as against the voluntarism of friendship. This is considered against a background shift in kinship studies towards a distinction between kinship as a category and kinship as experience. Kinship as experience often now comprises a series of deep fluctuations during the life course. Experience is also extended by the growth in life expectancy. This makes it still more important that the legacy of an individual's prior experiences of kinship may be partially resolved through the experience of grandparenting. The profound consequences of grandparenting lie not in the relationship to the grandchildren but in the possibilities that grandparenting offers to recalibrate all other kinship relations. These include the relationship with one's own children, the relationship with partners, the legacy of one's prior experience of being a parent, and even the memory of the way one was parented when a child
'lkea sofas are like H&M trousers': the potential of sensuous signs
What makes Ikea sofas similar to H&M trousers? Clothing and furniture
retail are increasingly aligned, as both follow fashion trends and seasonal
change. Because of the transience that shifting trends imply, clothing is
often read as a signifier of superficial or frivolous expression, masking
more important realities that lie elsewhere. In this article, I follow Webb
Keane in asserting that when treating clothing as a sign of surface
adornment, as a mere communicator of meaning, one not only
dematerialises the sign but foregrounds meaning over action. In focusing
on the sensuous qualities of signs (qualisigns), I view Ikea goods as sites
of potential and compare how adorned surfaces are more than semiotic
vehicles, but also material things that have effects
La memoire en attente. Le musee ethnographique dans l'lrlande post-coloniale
Le parcours historique des collections ethnographiques irlandaises, historiquement les plus importantes, lie au passe colonialiste et post-colonialiste ae l'lrlande. L'ile occupe a cet egard une position tout a certaine epoque, elle abrita en effet la seconde ville de l'Empire britannique, tout en figurant parmi le plus des eftets catastrophiques de l'administration coloniale. L'histoire recente dans le domaine des est elle aussi inhabituelle : de superbes collections ethnographiques et folkloriques sont restees enfermees decennies. Or, ces objets temoignent de l'idee que l'lrlande se fait d'elle-meme et de sa position dans presente ce patrimoine ethnographique dont la signification anthropologique est examinee en appliquant en attente
Design Dispersed: Design History, Design Practice and Anthropology
This special issue is part of a rising tide of literature dedicated to design in the disci-pline of anthropology. In this publication, we respond supportively to Lucy Suchman’s call that ‘[. . .] we need less a reinvented anthropology as (or for) design than a critical anthropology of design’.1 Arriving at this academic moment entails at least two schol-arly trajectories that have been hitherto distinct, concerning how anthropology has engaged with design history on the one hand, and with design practice on the other
Introduction: Ireland's new ethnographic horizons
An appropriate entry point to our discussion of ethnographic collections in Ireland is
the remarkable history of an assemblage of non-European ethnographic artefacts
housed in the National Museum of Ireland (NMI), Dublin. The 12,500 artefacts from
the Pacific, the Americas and Mrica are described as 'one of the finest collections of
that kind in the world' (Hart 1995, 36). In contrast to a parallel collection in the
Ulster Museum, Belfast, which for some time has been drawn on for exhibitions, this
collection has been out of view for a considerable period. Indeed, William Hart writes
that '[t]he Mrican collections of the National Museum of Ireland are one of its bestkept
secrets' (ibid., 36). One of its constituent units-the O'Beirne Collection-'has
never been on view to the public' and has been 'totally forgotten' (ibid.). While these
collections have been largely kept in crated storage from 1979 to 2002, a permanent
exhibition space is now being planned. This unveiling of an extensive collection in the
National Museum comes at a time of extensive rethinking of ethnography and its
artefacts-both nationally and internationally, academically and in practice. And
though ethnographic exhibitions are not an uncommon presence in many European
capitals, in Ireland the disclosure of this 'absent presence' (Buchli and Lucas 2001)
suggests a potentially fruitful medium to refract shifting identities within the island of
Ireland
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